Soon, apparently. From the Vancouver Sun newspaper:
Housing market slowing down
Eric Beauchesne, Canwest News Service
Published: Friday, May 23, 2008
OTTAWA -- Canada's long-running housing boom has ended, with the formerly bubbling markets of Calgary and Edmonton already having gone from hot to not, and with the current hot spots of Saskatoon and Regina to follow, a major Canadian bank says.
Mortgage-market innovation delayed the inevitable but couldn't prevent it, Royal Bank of Canada said in its analysis of major urban real estate markets Thursday...
..."The delayed arrival of softer housing markets can be partly attributed to recent mortgage innovation that has seeped into the Canadian market during the last two years," it said, citing higher loan-to-value ratios and longer amortization periods of up to 40 years, which opened the market to a wider range of buyers and prolonged the housing boom.
The mortgage-market innovations, which make housing more affordable in the short term, also heighten the risk of default in the long term, it said.
Markets in the West, which have risen the furthest above their underlying values, are the most at risk of an increase in defaults as a result of recent mortgage innovations, the report's author, RBC economist Amy Goldbloom, said in an interview...
..."The markets that soared well above their underlying economic fundamentals are the very ones with the most downside potential," the report said...
http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/n...9-029cb6238856
Eric Beauchesne, Canwest News Service
Published: Friday, May 23, 2008
OTTAWA -- Canada's long-running housing boom has ended, with the formerly bubbling markets of Calgary and Edmonton already having gone from hot to not, and with the current hot spots of Saskatoon and Regina to follow, a major Canadian bank says.
Mortgage-market innovation delayed the inevitable but couldn't prevent it, Royal Bank of Canada said in its analysis of major urban real estate markets Thursday...
..."The delayed arrival of softer housing markets can be partly attributed to recent mortgage innovation that has seeped into the Canadian market during the last two years," it said, citing higher loan-to-value ratios and longer amortization periods of up to 40 years, which opened the market to a wider range of buyers and prolonged the housing boom.
The mortgage-market innovations, which make housing more affordable in the short term, also heighten the risk of default in the long term, it said.
Markets in the West, which have risen the furthest above their underlying values, are the most at risk of an increase in defaults as a result of recent mortgage innovations, the report's author, RBC economist Amy Goldbloom, said in an interview...
..."The markets that soared well above their underlying economic fundamentals are the very ones with the most downside potential," the report said...
http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/n...9-029cb6238856
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